After sixteen years and 10,000 hours of slip trailing on clay, I have perfected the Mark Dally Slip Trailer© into the best slip trailing tool you can buy. The pliable, soft slip bag moulds to your hand allowing effortless, fine control over slip and glaze application, with no discomfort. Eight interchangeable tips give you a wide range of precision line thicknesses, all easily cleaned with the corresponding cleaning tools. No spluttering or splodging, no aches or strain, just precise, comfortable slip decoration with ease.
The pliable, soft slip bag moulds to your hand allowing effortless, fine control over slip and glaze application. Ten interchangeable tips give you a wide range of precision line thicknesses, all easily cleaned with the corresponding cleaning tools:
1 slip trailer bag, latex, with rubber ferrule and removable barrel
10 tips, stainless steel in 12g to 21g gauges (2.2mm to 0.5mm inner diameters)
1 sealing end cap, prevents drying out between decorating sessions
1 syringe, for high-pressure water flush cleaning
3 cleaning pins, stainless steel in graduated gauges for cleaning tips
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Eurozone: Due to changes in the recent Eurozone GPSR regulations (2024 -13th Dec), as a small business, I can no longer afford to conform to EU Trading Regulations, therefore cannot ship to the EU/NI. Please contact me if you have any queries.
Received The Mark Dally Slip Trailer for xmas from my son. Have to say that I love it! A wonderful gadget easy to use and effective. Smashing product and although I thought it was pricey to start with, it’s all good quality stuff. Would have cost much more than that here in Norway. Seriously, sat with a smile on my face using it, its very comfortable and easy to use and no splodging at all. What a fabulous addition it is to my workbox! just so pleased with it.
Once I was used to using the slip trailer it became a delight to operate. You can get a high degree of accuracy with it, as you can hold it like a pen and it solves my gripes with previous slip trailers I have bought, in that it doesn’t splodge and doesn’t cause your hands to ache. In short it is the best slip trailer I have used and I suspect the best slip trailer that you can purchase today. I found once the trailer was filled and all the air expelled, air was never sucked back into the trailer, which meant absolutely no splodging of slip and no having to prime the trailer by squeezing out any air before going onto the pot.
Loving having a play, thank you so much. Did this drawing of the Six Sisters in Napier NZ on a curved salad bowl ! You made the latex bladder to fit my hand size and it's just great. So comfortable to use. Thank you.
Using Mark’s slip trailer has transformed the way I work. The range of nozzle sizes makes it so much easier to work precisely and I don’t get the hand fatigue that I used to with the traditional bulb type of trailer. No fatigue means no more shaky-hand, and the smooth and predictable flow means no unexpected spurts or sudden dry runs.I have two now for ease of colour changes, and can’t imagine life without them now. Louise
Mark Dally, MA. Ceramic Artist and Designer Maker,
Mark Dally Ceramics
I decorate my studio tableware, Black&WhiteWare, using traditional slip trailing and brushed slip techniques, in a contemporary take on traditional Staffordshire slipware.
FAQ
Does the slip trailer splutter and spit? No, because you expel air from the latex bag when filling (see above), you get no spluttering or spitting. Because the latex bag is soft, it self-seals and cannot draw air back down into the bag through the tip.
How do I change the stainless steel tips?
A simple twist to the left will unlock the tip. To tighten, turn to the right. All the tips have the same collar size, so fit snugly onto the slip trailer barrel.
If the stainless steel tips get blocked how do I clear them?
Twist off the blocked tip and immerse in water. Fill the flushing syringe with water, insert into tip collar, and force the plunger down hard; the jet of water will flush out any blockage in the tip. If this does not work after a couple of tries, use the cleaning pins. The smaller tips can become blocked more easily, so push the fine or superfine cleaning pin down the end of the tip's tube to dislodge any blockage. Follow with a syringe flush of water. Typically, the larger tips only need a flush of water from the syringe.